Category Archives: AFRICA

African novel Congo: Heart of Diamonds

Dave Donelson’s new novel, Heart of Diamonds is an exciting romantic thriller about scandal, love, and death in the Congo. As the book cover copy reads, “Amid the bloody violence of the Congo’s civil war, TV reporter Valerie Grey uncovers a deadly diamond-smuggling scheme that reaches from Africa to the White House”

You can see more details at Heart Of Diamonds: A novel of scandal, love, and death in the Congo

It will be in bookstores as well. Just ask your favorite bookseller for ISBN 978-1601641571. Heart of Diamonds was published by Kunati Books, named Independent Publisher of the Year at the 2008 BEA.

Ghana : When you learn Akan – whose language do you learn?

Difficulty in defining languages

Anything to do with ‘Akan’ seems popular on this blog. But have you ever thought about what exactly is meant by the term? There is a great article on abibitumikasa.com which appeared as a forum comment by Akyeame-Kwame. It delineates the difficulties in defining languages.

The name ‘Akan’

When you learn Akan – whose language do you learn?
The word ‘Akan’ designates quite different groups of people depending on the period of time at which it was used and on the context in which it was or is being used. Roughly, we can distinguish between its traditional native use, its use as a scientific classificatory term, and its (modern) socio-political use.

Paper : An evaluation of infant immunization in Africa

An evaluation of infant immunization in Africa: is a transformation in progress?

Authors: L. Arevshatian; C. J. Clements; S. K. Lwanga
Publisher: Bulletin of the World Health Organization : the International Journal of Public Health, 2007

This paper, in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization, assesses the progress towards meeting the goals of the African Regional strategic Plan of the Expanded Programme on Immunisation between 2001 and 2005. These goals include: to interrupt the circulation of wild polio virus in all countries; eliminate maternal and neonatal tetanus in all high-risk districts; 80 per cent of the countries to have reached at least 80 per cent diphtheria-tetanus-pertissus-3 (DTP-3) coverage; and measles to be controlled and eliminated in Southern Africa.

The paper finds that although more infants had been immunised by 2005, most of the targets had been missed by at least half of the region’s counties. The authors estimate that DTP-3 coverage increased from 54 per cent in 2000 to 69 per cent in 2004, and as a result the number of non-immunised children declined from 1.4 million in 2002 to 900,000 in 2004. Reported measles cases dropped from 520,000 in 2000 to 316,000 in 2005 and mortality was reduced by approximately 60 per cent. The paper concludes that the rates of immunisation coverage are improving dramatically in the WHO African Region. The huge increases in spending on immunisation and the related improvements in programme performance are linked predominantly to increases in donor funding.

http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/85/6/06-031526/en/

Around Africa in a Phoenician boat

Phoenician boat reconstruction

Archaeological reconstruction is an interesting branch of archaeology.  The aim is ‘to generate and test hypotheses or an interpretation, based upon archaeological source material’.  In this case a phoenician boat has been reconstructed from archaeological evidence and they plan to sail it round Africa. Here is the BBC report on it :

On Arwad Island off the coast of Syria, a group of 20 sailors-to-be are preparing for a voyage their captain believes has not been undertaken for two and a half millennia. They plan to set off on Sunday on a journey that attempts to replicate what the Greek historian Herodotus mentions as the first circumnavigation of Africa in about 600BC.Read the full report

Paper : Maize-Based Cropping Systems in Kenya

On-Site and Off-Site Long-Term Economic Impacts of Soil Fertility Management Practices: The Case of Maize-Based Cropping Systems in Kenya

By Ephraim Nkonya, Patrick Gicheru, Johannes Woelcke, Barrack Okoba, Daniel Kilambya, and Louis N. Gachimbi

July 2008

http://www.ifpri.org/pubs/dp/ifpridp00778.asp

This paper analyzes the on-site and off-site economic impacts of various sustainable land management (SLM) practices in Kenya. Long-term trial data are used to establish the relationship between SLM practices and maize yield. The analysis of on-site effects focuses on the profitability of maize production at the farm level, while the examined off-site effects include carbon sequestration and siltation from maize farms, which increase the cost of potable water production. The major contribution of this study is the use of long-term experimental data to estimate the impacts of land management practices on crop yield and consider their off-site benefits and costs.

Uganda : Education reform

Reformation of the education sector in Uganda

In 1992 Uganda embarked on a reformation of the education sector funded by $110 million from USAID and World Bank. Initially an improved teacher training system , the Teacher Development and Management System, was developed and  supported by technical assistance through USAID. Between 1993 and 2000 the primary education system was overhauled.

Here are several articles assessing the education reform programme in Uganda.

Support to Uganda Primary Education Reform

Education sector reform in Uganda: a critical assessment

Supporting Educational Quality and Policy Reform Uganda July – September 2002

Mali: Jatropha Oil Lights Up Villages

 

Jatropha

Image by dracophylla via Flickr

Jatropha biodiesel

Eye on Mali: Jatropha Oil Lights Up Villages
Some 700 communities in Mali have installed biodiesel generators powered by oil from the hardy Jatropha curcas plant to meet their energy needs, according to Reuters. The Malian government is promoting cultivation of the inedible oilseed bush, commonly used as a hedge or medicinal plant, to provide electricity for lighting homes, running water pumps and grain mills, and other critical uses. Mali hopes to eventually power all of the country’s 12,000 villages with affordable, renewable energy sources.

Read the full story

Mali Music: Balafon museum for Sikasso

A first for Sikasso

I’ve just seen a post on the African Press Association website about a new African xylophone museum to be created in Sikasso. It will be the first museum designed to preserve the heritage of the balafon, one of the famous musical instruments of the region. The Balafon is played in Mali, Burkina Faso, Cote-d’Ivoire, Togo, Benin and Ghana and the ‘triangle du Balafon’ festival is held in Sikasso.

The video below shows how the balafon is learnt. That little chap on the right is 5 years old!

Here’s what the video maker, SAMBLADIABATE, says:

Practicing means for us playing, making music and having fun together. Notes, scores don’t exist. You must learn everything by ear. Further, you must be able to play at both sides of the instument. (Imagine a piano or a violin, where the deep tones are on the right hand side…)

A goal of this exercise is that Small Moussa Diabate (here 5 years old) learns different ostinati so firmly that he, in spite of the rhythmically free-flying solo and the capricious beat-changes of Big Moussa Diabate (my favourite nephew, by the way), can’t be thrown out of the beat any more.

The tuning of the Sambla balafon is something like C’-A-G-E-Eb-C. The Sambla, like the Tusia and the Siamou, use the balafon to communicate.

Another one of his:

African poetry : RATENG AND BRIDE – Alila

RATENG’ AND BRIDE, a new book by Joseph Alila.

Available from CreateSpace for $14.99

In the epic poem, “RATENG’ AND BRIDE,” Joseph R Alila (Author of such novels as “Whisper to My Aching Heart” and Sunset on Polygamy”) pleads with the hero (Rateng’) to abandon a lifelong ambition of reigning in a killer, illusive Bride, and redeeming his honor and Ramogi people’s collective pride.
Of Rateng’s illusive Bride-call her Power, Leadership or The Presidency-Alila reminds his hero of her corrupting, material allure and deadly charms. Like a gem, a Powerful Presidency corrupts everybody it touches, and its corrupting effects linger like the nauseating smell of a scared skunk.
Employing rich imagery and proverbs, and never shy to go Luo vernacular with proverbs, in “RATENG’ AND BRIDE,” Alila has played his satirical hand, again, and demonstrated his knowledge of the political landscape of Kenya.

ISBN/EAN13: 1438251092 / 9781438251097

About the author:
Joseph R. Alila was born in 1956, in Ndhiwa Kenya. A well traveled scientist and educator, Dr. Alila is the Author of several novels, including, “SUNSET ON POLYGAMY” and WHISPER TO MY ACHING HEART.” RATENG’ AND BRIDE is his second book of poems.
He lives in Schenectady, New York.

Africa Mali : African hibiscus harvest success story

Hibiscus harvest gives hope

The following article is really encouraging. The hibiscus being harvested is not the same as the garden variety (see the illustration below).

Source:http://www.herbs.org/current/hibworld.html

African hibiscus harvest success story

Dried Hibiscus sabdariffa flowers, used to mak...

Image via Wikipedia

Over the past two years, HRF has been working with the Africa Bureau of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) to develop a test crop of hibiscus (Hibiscus sabdariffa) in Mali, West Africa, one of the world’s poorest nations.

During his five-week trip to Africa last fall, HRF president Rob McCaleb was able to see for himself the positive impact that HRF’s hibiscus growing project has had on the lives of hundreds of Malian farmers, their families, and their communities. The project has provided a source of much needed training and income for more than 1,000 people, who were able to improve cultivation and processing methods to meet strict international standards for quality and cleanliness of the hibiscus crop.

Read the full article

Africa Mali Environment : All it takes to save the lakes from climate change is money

Clogged up canals need digging out

The following article appeared on IRIN NEWS

Lake Faguibine (spear-shaped) from space, Apri...

Lake Afguined (spear shaped), Image via Wikipedia

MALI: All it takes to save the lakes from climate change is money

LAKE FAGUIBINE, 5 June 2008 (IRIN) – Ahmed Toure spends most days squatting beside the only surfaced road running through the Timbuktu region of northern Mali, his face and eyes shielded against the sand and dust by a traditional Touareg wrap and dark glasses. He is waiting for work, or just a ride to somewhere else.

The wait for work is often a long one. “There’s very little opportunity these days,” he said. Getting a ride out is easier; many people are heading for the more fertile south of Mali, or even further to Cote d’Ivoire, Benin and elsewhere.

Until the 1980s, this remote region in the far north of Mali, in the Sahel region on the southern edge of the Sahara Desert, was the country’s grain basket. Four interlinked lakes, of which Lake Faguibine was the largest, provided fishing and over 60,000 hectares of fertile land for farming and watering animals.

But the lake started drying up and the region’s prosperity evaporated with the water; today, Lake Faguibine is bone dry.

In the 1980s some aid agencies started handing out food and working with pastoralists, but for the most part people say they just get by on what they can forage, grow in market gardens, or buy.

“The past was a time of plenty with fish, forests, and animals,” said Mohamed Ali Ag Abdoulaye, an elder in the village of Bintagoungou, close to what was Lake Faguibine. “Now everything is gone.”

Simple solutions?

The solution to the problem is simple to understand but apparently hard to do.

When the lake network was functioning it was fed by two canals from the Niger River, one 104km long, the other 57km. originally the waterways were several metres wide; now they are clogged with sand and debris, and have shrivelled to just a few centimetres across in some places.

Kalfa Sanogo, a representative of the UN Development Programme (UNDP) in Mali, said the clogged canals, combined with two major droughts in 1973-74 and 1984-85, which had severely depleted the lakes, were at the root of the problem.

Clearing and re-digging the canals in the scorching desert heat is the solution, but getting the work done in this remote region, more than 1,000km north of Mali’s capital, Bamako, where there are few roads, power sources, or connections with the outside world, is extremely difficult.

“The physical obstacles to getting this done are huge,” Sanogo said. But the payoff of getting the water flowing is huge too. “At least 350,000 people would benefit from this project. In a country of 12 million people, that is no small thing.”

Getting it done

In 2006 the government set up the Lake Faguibine Authority to get the lakes reopened. Col Ascofare, the director, says his equipment includes a couple of rusty mechanical diggers and dump trucks, and a limited supply of fuel for them. For the rest of work he has to rely on manpower, mobilising hundreds of local men to clear sections by hand.

In two years of work Ascofare has only made enough progress to reopen a small part of the waterways. Around one of the four lakes which have started now refilling because of the work, a splash of green millet and the villagers steadily planting and harvesting is evidence of the project’s potential.

Locals say they are harvesting three crops a year, and as a result food prices in the area around the lake have halved in the last year.

Stopping the sand

Ascofare’s enemy is the towering wall of sand that skirts the northern edge of the lake system. The Sahara is steadily creeping south, drowning everything in its path in sand, including the Lake Faguibine canals. “We have got to find a way to stop the sand; if we had no sand here, we would have no problem. Every year, the men I mobilise just have to keep on digging out the same section of canal.”

He needs money – perhaps as much as 13 billion CFA francs (US$), he estimated – to buy machines and equipment, and seeds to plant up to 300,000 trees per year to hold the sand back.

“This could create huge employment here if we got the funding and the work could begin properly,” he said. “This one project alone could feed and stabilise the whole region, providing natural riches for everyone. No-one would need food aid, seeds, development aid; we would be self-sufficient again on our own crops.”

If Lake Faguibine is not saved, “We will just go backwards,” he said.

Overstretch

Sanogo, of the UNDP, said Mali’s government was already overstretched, trying to deal with pressing health, food and water needs an African country that is geographically one of the largest and economically one of the poorest. “Whether this happens or not is up to the donors,” he commented.

The UN Special Adviser on Conflict, Jan Egeland, who travelled to Lake Faguibine as part of a week-long mission to raise awareness of the impact of climate change on the Sahel region, said the Lake Faguibine project and others like it should be a priority.

“We must ask ourselves if we are really going to let life-saving projects like this, which are directly related to climate change, go unfunded?” Egeland wrote in a diary entry on the day he visited Lake Faguibine. He is contributing the journal of his Sahel mission to IRIN.

“It would really be a moral failure if climate change projects that already exist to help the people affected would go unfunded by those industrialised nations that caused climate change.”

Encyclopedia of Earth additions to the profile of Mali

Mali profile

The Encyclopedia of Earth has additions to the profile of Mali. There are really good and detailed profiles of the Bandiagara, World Heritage site and Eco-Regions of Mali, although other headings are obviously work in progress and are in outline only.

Cliffs_of_Bandiagara,Land_of_the_Dogons, Mali

Inner Niger Delta flooded savanna

Sahara desert

South Saharan steppe and woodlands

West Saharan montane xeric woodlands

West Sudanian savanna

More African country profiles

Africa Collection

Citation:

Surface, Maggie (Lead Author); Lakhdar Boukerrou (Topic Editor). 2008. “Mali country profile.” In: Encyclopedia of Earth. Eds. Cutler J. Cleveland (Washington, D.C.: Environmental Information Coalition, National Council for Science and the Environment). [Published in the Encyclopedia of Earth June 4, 2008; Retrieved June 8, 2008].

http://www.eoearth.org/article/Mali_country_profile

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